Microsoft Authentication Library extensions (MSAL EX) provides a persistence API that can save your data on disk, encrypted on Windows, macOS and Linux. Concurrent data access will be coordinated by a file lock mechanism.
The Microsoft Authentication Extensions for Python offers secure mechanisms for client applications to perform cross-platform token cache serialization and persistence. It gives additional support to the Microsoft Authentication Library for Python (MSAL).
MSAL Python supports an in-memory cache by default and provides the SerializableTokenCache to perform cache serialization. You can read more about this in the MSAL Python documentation. Developers are required to implement their own cache persistance across multiple platforms and Microsoft Authentication Extensions makes this simpler.
The supported platforms are Windows, Mac and Linux.
Note: It is recommended to use this library for cache persistance support for Public client applications such as Desktop apps only. In web applications, this may lead to scale and performance issues. Web applications are recommended to persist the cache in session. Take a look at this webapp sample.
You can find Microsoft Authentication Extensions for Python on Pypi.
pip install msal-extensions
.This library follows Semantic Versioning.
You can find the changes for each version under Releases.
The Microsoft Authentication Extensions library provides the PersistedTokenCache
which accepts a platform-dependent persistence instance. This token cache can then be used to instantiate the PublicClientApplication
in MSAL Python.
The token cache includes a file lock, and auto-reload behavior under the hood.
Here is an example of this pattern for multiple platforms (taken from the complete sample here):
def build_persistence(location, fallback_to_plaintext=False):
"""Build a suitable persistence instance based your current OS"""
try:
return build_encrypted_persistence(location)
except:
if not fallback_to_plaintext:
raise
logging.warning("Encryption unavailable. Opting in to plain text.")
return FilePersistence(location)
persistence = build_persistence("token_cache.bin")
print("Type of persistence: {}".format(persistence.__class__.__name__))
print("Is this persistence encrypted?", persistence.is_encrypted)
cache = PersistedTokenCache(persistence)
Now you can use it in an MSAL application like this:
app = msal.PublicClientApplication("my_client_id", token_cache=cache)
Here is an example of this pattern for multiple platforms (taken from the complete sample here):
def build_persistence(location, fallback_to_plaintext=False):
"""Build a suitable persistence instance based your current OS"""
try:
return build_encrypted_persistence(location)
except: # pylint: disable=bare-except
if not fallback_to_plaintext:
raise
logging.warning("Encryption unavailable. Opting in to plain text.")
return FilePersistence(location)
persistence = build_persistence("storage.bin", fallback_to_plaintext=False)
print("Type of persistence: {}".format(persistence.__class__.__name__))
print("Is this persistence encrypted?", persistence.is_encrypted)
data = { # It can be anything, here we demonstrate an arbitrary json object
"foo": "hello world",
"bar": "",
"service_principle_1": "blah blah...",
}
persistence.save(json.dumps(data))
assert json.loads(persistence.load()) == data
Python versions which are 6 months older than their end-of-life cycle defined by Python Software Foundation (PSF) will not receive new feature updates from this library.
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